
Contents
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The Concept of ‘Trust’ The Concept of ‘Trust’
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The Mandates and Trusteeship Arrangements The Mandates and Trusteeship Arrangements
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Territories Covered Territories Covered
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Objectives and Duration Objectives and Duration
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Administration and Supervision Administration and Supervision
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The South West Africa/Namibia Controversy The South West Africa/Namibia Controversy
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Self-Determination and the Repudiation of Trusteeship Self-Determination and the Repudiation of Trusteeship
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Revival—‘Failed States,’ Trusteeship Proposals, International and Foreign State Territorial Administration Revival—‘Failed States,’ Trusteeship Proposals, International and Foreign State Territorial Administration
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Reform Proposals for the Trusteeship Council Reform Proposals for the Trusteeship Council
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Conclusion: Into the Future, the Peacebuilding Commission Conclusion: Into the Future, the Peacebuilding Commission
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Notes Notes
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9 Trusteeship Council
Get accessRalph Wilde is based at University College London and currently engaged in an interdisciplinary research project on the extraterritorial application of international human rights law. His book International Territorial Administration: How Trusteeship and the Civilizing Mission Never Went Away (2008) was awarded the 2009 Certificate of Merit of the American Society of International Law. He previously served on the executive bodies of the American and European Societies of International Law, and the International Law Association.
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Published:08 August 2018
Cite
Abstract
The Trusteeship Council, a UN principal organ, is responsible for the Trusteeship System, an institutionalized form of colonial administration broadly following the League of Nations Mandates arrangements. This system came to be repudiated, alongside other forms of colonialism, by the external self-determination entitlement that emerged in international law after the creation of the UN in 1945. The present chapter details the concept of ‘trust’ in international policy; the central features of the Mandates and Trusteeship arrangements; the territories covered; the objectives and duration of the arrangements; the structure of administration and supervision; the historical controversy over South West Africa/Namibia; the self-determination entitlement; the revival of trusteeship; reform proposals; the new Peacebuilding Commission; and the continuing use of the Trusteeship Council chamber.
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